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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Multimeric structure of the membrane erythropoietin receptor of murine erythroleukemia cells (Friend cells). Cross- linking of erythropoietin with the spleen focus-forming virus envelope protein.

In erythroleukemia cells infected with the polycythemia strain of the Friend virus complex, erythropoietin could be cross-linked mainly to a protein of 63 kDa when using disuccinimidyl suberate. In contrast, erythropoietin in other erythroleukemia cells cross-linked to two proteins of 85 and 100 kDa. When native erythropoietin receptor complexes were immunoprecipitated, the 63-kDa erythropoietin-cross- linked protein could be precipitated both by antibodies directed against the intracellular part of the cloned chain of the erythropoietin receptor and by antibodies directed against the envelope proteins of the Friend virus. However, after denaturation of the complexes, the 63-kDa protein was only precipitated by antibodies directed against the envelope proteins of the Friend virus. Enzymatic deglycosylation confirmed that erythropoietin was cross-linked with the envelope protein of the defective virus and bidimensional diagonal gel electrophoresis analyses showed that some of the erythropoietin cross-linked envelope proteins were dimerized by disulfide bonds. Thus, the main erythropoietin-receptor complex in the plasma membrane of these cells consisted of a molecule of the cloned chain of the erythropoietin receptor noncovalently associated with one or two disulfide-bonded molecule(s) of the envelope protein of the defective virus. Moreover, our results also showed that the viral envelope protein associated with the cloned chain of the erythropoietin receptor at a site distinct from the erythropoietin binding site.[1]

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